#Marx brothers council podcast
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
megan-the-artoonist · 11 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
My latest postcard for the Marx Brothers Council Podcast! This was sent out to their Patreon subscribers for October.
Blurb on the back of the postcard by Noah Diamond:
The confident line and whimsical wit of Megan Jurek was last seen here in May with the "I Brake for Left-Handed Moths" design. Now, Megan celebrates Groucho's birthday month, noting: "Groucho has the distinction of sporting multiple iconic looks throughout his life. Sometimes I think about 20th century events in the context of what Groucho would have been up to at the time, or how many years he missed them by. For instance, he could have seen the first Star Wars movie!" You can enjoy more of Megan's work megantheartoonist on Instagram and MeganCartoonist on Redbubble. Thank you for supporting The Marx Brothers Council Podcast!
16 notes · View notes
travsd · 9 months ago
Text
Now Available to Pre-Order: "Zeppo, The Reluctant Marx Brother" -- and More!
We awoke to exciting news this morning — Robert S. Bader has just announced his new book Zeppo: The Reluctant Marx Brother, published by Applause, will be on shelves as of October 15, and is now available to pre-order. The description is here: Zeppo was the Marx Brother who didn’t want to go into the family business. A juvenile delinquent in his teen years, before joining his brothers on stage,…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
2 notes · View notes
harveylembecks · 2 years ago
Text
compilation of the bud/lou impressions from the most recent marx bros. podcast. CERTAINLY!!!
2 notes · View notes
scribledon · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I apologize for forgetting to post here for what a month? Anyway I literally forgot about tumblr. You haven’t missed much just a bunch of Marxes. Also I designed a postcard for The Marx Brothers Council Podcast which is pretty cool. Also it’s a contest.
17 notes · View notes
scrambled-eggsed · 3 years ago
Note
1, 6, 7, 19, 20, 24!!!
1 - how did you get introduced to rqg?
My friend got me to listen to tma and I went "oh that's a really cool story. Oh the people involved are really cool too! I wonder what other podcasts they have"
6 - who is your favourite historical npc?
Ohhhhhh that's hard. Wilde is the obvious answer but I also love curie and OBVIOUSLY EINSTEIN and Augusta Leigh. And Ada Lovelace had like 15 minutes of screentime but i also love her
7 - what historical figure would you like to see as an npc?
Idk honestly. Maybe Mary Shelley? Or obviously marx and engels. Oh and there's no way he would ever appear but i think alex's portrayal of socrates would have been amazing
19 - which arc is your favourite?
Paris was incredible, and so was the journey from japan to the northern wastes (does that count?). But assuming the airship arcs count as arcs, the few episodes of the airship ride bw paris and prague were incredible and are my comfort-listen and i treasure them in my heart. Also everything between dover and paris was fantastic
20 - what was your favourite reveal?
Damn in a show like rqg it's so difficult to choose. Uhhhhhh zolf killing his brother? Hamid's backstory reveal? The entirety of mr ceiling's explanation that left everyone horrified? The prague university council all being Harlequins? There's so much to choose from
24 - what's your favourite character introduction?
Bertie's entrance in ep 1 was hilarious. Also Wilde's dramatic entrance break in was iconic. Also Eldarion's introduction with the Damascus chapter of the harloquins was amazing. Meeting Einstein in Kafka's study was great. So yeah again there's SO MUCH to choose from
4 notes · View notes
technicolor--dreams · 4 years ago
Audio
Speaking on The Marx brothers council podcast, the authors of “The Marx brothers in a nutshell” documentary from 1982, Robert B. Weide and Joe Adamson, recount how Gene Kelly got involved as a narrator in the film, and their experience working with him.
10 notes · View notes
mrmichaelchadler · 6 years ago
Text
Duck Soup at 85: Make Freedonia Great Again
The people believe the government has been mismanaged and demand it be placed in the new hands of a progressive fearless leader. Newly installed, the president presides over his first executive meeting, during which he blithely insults all of his cabinet directors. “I spend all my time and energy to my duties and what do I get?” one pushes back. “You get awfully tiresome after awhile,” the president responds.
This is not “fake news” coming from the current White House. This is real comedy courtesy of director Leo McCarey, the credited screenwriters Bert Kalmar, Harry Ruby, Arthur Sheekman and Nat Perrin and four Marx brothers, with invaluable support from Margaret Dumont, Edward Kennedy, Louis Calhern and Raquel Torres. The film was—is—“Duck Soup” and it recently celebrated its 85th anniversary.
In 2000, the American Film Institute ranked “Duck Soup” the fifth funniest comedy of the 20th century. We’ll leave for another time whether it is actually funnier than “Some Like It Hot” (No. 1), “Tootsie” (No. 2), “Dr. Strangelove” (No. 3) or “Annie Hall” (you do the math). But it is generally considered by Marx Brothers purists to be the team’s funniest, with no dead spots, gratuitous romantic side plots or even harp and piano solos by Harpo and Chico. It’s non-stop anarchy that was rediscovered and embraced by college-aged Baby Boomers during the Vietnam War, “don’t trust anybody over 30” and Watergate eras.
It has been almost 50 years since that last Marx Brothers revival. At a time of seemingly unprecedented dysfunction in our nation’s capital and public confidence in its lawmakers at an all-time low, is it time for “Duck Soup,” with its farcical take on government, to go viral?
Directed by Leo McCarey (“The Awful Truth,” “Ruggles of Red Gap,” various Laurel and Hardy films), “Duck Soup” is set in the mythological kingdom of Freedonia, where Groucho’s Rufus T. Firefly has been installed as leader by the country’s largest (and don’t think Firefly doesn’t comment on that) financial backer, Mrs. Teasdale (Dumont), Harpo and Chico play two spies hired by Ambassador Trentino (Calhern) of neighboring Sylvania to gather information that would undermine Firefly. Plan B is to gain control of Freedonia is to romance Mrs. Teasdale himself or start a war; whichever comes first. Zeppo plays Firefly’s secretary (he would depart the team following this film).
In adding “Duck Soup” to his pantheon of “Great Movies”, Roger Ebert noted, “‘A Night at the Opera’... contains some of their best work, yes, but in watching it I fast-forward over the sappy interludes involving Kitty Carlisle and Allan Jones. In ‘Duck Soup’ there are no sequences I can skip; the movie is funny from beginning to end.” 
“Duck Soup” was the movie that gave Woody Allen’s suicidal character in “Hannah and Her Sisters” a new lease on life. Monty Python was surely playing homage during Holy Grail’s musical number, “Knights of the Round Table” with the knights’ helmets being played like a xylophone as the Marxes did during “Duck Soup”’s “This Country’s Going to War” spectacular. It is perhaps most famous for its mirror scene, an uncharacteristic bit of silent comedy between Groucho and Harpo. (Here’s Lucy and Harpo’s recreation from "I Love Lucy").
There’s no question “Duck Soup” is still funny. But is it still relevant? For those who are not fans of the current president, it is hard not to think of him when Rufus T. Firefly, laying down the laws of his administration, sings, “The last man nearly ruined this place/He didn’t know what to do with it/If you think this country’s bad off now/Just wait ‘til I get through with it.”
It is true that Donald Trump shares Firefly’s thin skin; Firefly plunges his country into war when Trentino calls him an “upstart.” But that’s where the parallels end, according to Roy Blout, Jr., whose salute of the film, Hail, Hail Euphoria! is the literary equivalent to home video commentary. By email, he offered, “‘Duck Soup’ remains profoundly tonic in its take on what’s toxic.”
Conventional wisdom labels “Duck Soup” a scathing anti-war satire. Here’s the punchline: It was not intended as such. This according to Steve Stoliar, who as a college student at UCLA in the 1970s led the charge for the re-release of the long stuck in the vaults “Animal Crackers,” which helped revitalize interest in the Marx Brothers, and who chronicled his years as Groucho’s archivist in the memoir Raised Eyebrows: My Years Inside Groucho’s House.
“Groucho alternated between being amused and annoyed by people reading things into the films that were never intended,” he said in a phone interview. “He was the head of a hotel in ‘The Cocoanuts’ and the head of a college in ‘Horse Feathers.’ The writers thought, ‘Where else can we put Groucho where he doesn’t belong?’ and you can’t get loftier than the head of a mythological kingdom.”
During the heyday of the Marx Brothers revival, Groucho was often asked his favorites of their films. He invariably cited “A Night at the Opera” and “A Day at the Races,” which were made for MGM. “It was when the college students started embracing the Paramount films that Groucho started filtering in ‘Duck Soup,’” Stoliar said. “He didn’t think of “Duck Soup” for years because it marked the end of their Paramount contract (the film had received mixed reviews at the time and, while not a bomb, was not as big at the box office as their previous films). Then [legendary producer Irving Thalberg] brings them into the wonderland of MGM and makes two big moneymaking movies. Groucho felt 'Opera' and 'Races' were their best in terms of story and production values, but in terms of funniness, 'Duck Soup' is the obvious winner. You get out of it that war is not good and that countries start wars over seemingly trivial things. That’s fine, but in terms of the artists’ intentions—it may sound simplistic—but Groucho said, ‘We were just trying to be funny.’”
Still, Benito Mussolini took offense and reportedly banned the film in Italy. And radicalized American college kids related to the brothers’ irreverence and thumbing their noses at authority. 
So where does that leave us? Will a new generation that has unprecedented access to movies and TV series be moved to re-discover an 85-year-old movie, in black and white, no less? If you count yourself a comedy geek and you haven’t seen it, what are you waiting for? (When you do see it, be sure to let us know what you think!)
By the way, about that title: several were in play before “Duck Soup,” including “Cracked Ice,” “Firecrackers” and “Grasshoppers.” “Duck Soup” was the title of a 1927 Laurel and Hardy short. But what does it mean? Groucho had this explanation for an interviewer: “Take two turkeys, one goose, four cabbages, but no duck, and mix them together. After one taste, you'll duck soup for the rest of your life."
(Thanks to Matthew Coniam, author of several books about the Marx Brothers, founder of the Marx Brothers Council Facebook community and with Bob Gassel, and Noah Diamond, co-host of the Marx Brothers Council Podcast, for background on the film)
from All Content http://bit.ly/2QlEuUK
0 notes
megan-the-artoonist · 5 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
My long-awaited second postcard design for The Marx Brothers Council Podcast. Can you identify all the references to Marx Brothers movies and history? There are 12 (maybe 13 but one is kind of a stretch).
13 notes · View notes
megan-the-artoonist · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Excited to finally reveal a postcard design I made for The Marx Brothers Council Podcast! They recently opened a Patreon and one of the perks of subscribing is receiving monthly postcards featuring all-new artwork. They’re looking for more artists, so I encourage anyone who’s interested to check into that opportunity!
19 notes · View notes
travsd · 10 months ago
Text
Hear the Real Groucho! And Much More
If I were any kind of a guy, I’d plug every single episode of the Marx Brothers Council Podcast as they drop, but the naked truth is, I can’t keep up. It’s the only podcast I listen to, but I can’t even keep up with listening to it, I’ve probably only heard 20% of the episodes, much as they fascinate, entertain, and beguile. By now, they’ve had many top Marx Brothers authors and other researchers…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
3 notes · View notes
travsd · 7 months ago
Text
Me and the "Miscellany" on the Marx Brothers Council Podcast!
Some 50 episodes after my last appearance (Look at Chicolini), I had the good fortune this week to return as a guest on the Marx Brothers Council Podcast to talk about my new book The Marx Brothers Miscellany and the upcoming Marxfest. Your correspondent had the best time chatting with Matthew Coniam and Noah Diamond (and Bob Gassel, who is now The Man Behind the Curtain, though just as involved…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
1 note · View note
travsd · 8 months ago
Text
Charlotte Mineau: From Michigan to "Monkey Business"
Towering over Fin in an Early Comedy Thanks, Matthew Coniam, of The Marx Brothers Council Podcast and The Annotated Marx Brothers, who made me aware of Charlotte Mineau (1886-1979). I’d noticed her in Monkey Business (1931) and remarked that she was a kind of Margaret Dumont substitute, as that as one of the few of the brothers’ films that lacks their customary female foil. Mineau appears during…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
1 note · View note
travsd · 6 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
The Marx Brothers Council Podcast (and I) Look at Chico Marx I was honored to be the guest of Matthew Coniam, Noah Diamond and Bob Gassell on the…
0 notes
travsd · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Coming Soon: Dracula A.D. 1931 Classic comedy fans may know Matthew Coniam as one of the presenters of the Marx Brothers Council Podcast.
1 note · View note
travsd · 6 years ago
Text
The Marx Brothers Council Podcast!
The Marx Brothers Council Podcast!
Tumblr media
It’s Gummo Marx’s birthday today (and also that of the Marx Brothers’ father Frenchie) and that seems a MOST apt occasion on which to plug The Marx Brothers Council Podcast.
There are many levels of fandom. Most folks are cheerful dilettantes on the subject of their favorite star (though many think they know more than they actually do). But there’s always an inner circle of obsessives who get…
View On WordPress
0 notes